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Intrinsic Absorption in the Spectrum of NGC 7469: Simultaneous Chandra, FUSE, and STIS Observations | Jennifer E. Scott
; Gerard A. Kriss
; Julia C. Lee
; Jessica Kim Quijano
; Michael Brotherton
; Claude R. Canizares
; Richard F. Green
; John Hutchings
; Mary Elizabeth Kaiser
; Herman Marshall
; William Oegerle
; Patrick Ogle
; Wei Zheng
; | Date: |
13 Sep 2005 | Subject: | astro-ph | Affiliation: | 2,3), Julia C. Lee , Jessica Kim Quijano , Michael Brotherton , Claude R. Canizares , Richard F. Green , John Hutchings , Mary Elizabeth Kaiser , Herman Marshall , William Oegerle , Patrick Ogle , Wei Zheng (NASA/GSFC, STScI, JHU, CfA, U. Wyo., MIT, | Abstract: | We present simultaneous X-ray, far-ultraviolet, and near-ultraviolet spectra of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 7469 obtained with the Chandra X-Ray Observatory, the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer, and the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope. Previous non-simultaneous observations of this galaxy found two distinct UV absorption components, at -560 and -1900 km/s, with the former as the likely counterpart of the X-ray absorber. We confirm these two absorption components in our new UV observations, in which we detect prominent O VI, Ly alpha, N V, and C IV absorption. In our Chandra spectrum we detect O VIII emission, but no significant O VIII or O VII absorption. We also detect a prominent Fe K alpha emission line in the Chandra spectrum, as well as absorption due to hydrogen-like and helium-like neon, magnesium, and silicon at velocities consistent with the -560 km/s UV absorber. The FUSE and STIS data reveal that the H I and C IV column densities in this UV- and X-ray- absorbing component have increased over time, as the UV continuum flux decreased. We use measured H I, N V, C IV, and O VI column densities to model the photoionization state of both absorbers self-consistently. We confirm the general physical picture of the outflow in which the low velocity component is a highly ionized, high density absorber with a total column density of 10^20 cm^-2, located near the broad emission line region, although due to measurable columns of N V and C IV, we assign it a somewhat smaller ionization parameter than found previously, U~1. The high velocity UV component is of lower density, log N=18.6, and likely resides farther from the central engine as we find its ionization parameter to be U=0.08. | Source: | arXiv, astro-ph/0509349 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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